This is a compilation of 22 Palestinian prisoners' experiences in Israeli jails . 1,027 prisoners were released in 2011 as part of the exchange with Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit and 22 of them were interviewed by journalists. Their commentaries were translated by CPDS and edited.
The book is dedicated to Samer Issawi and all Palestinian prisoners, past, present and future, and was released on 17April 2013, in conjunction with Palestinian Prisoners' Day.

Ramallah, 17 April 2013—Israeli authorities held at least seven Palestinian youths, aged 16 to 17, in solitary confinement for periods reaching up to 21 days so far this year, based on DCI-Palestine's research.

The figure represents one-third of the number of solitary confinement cases documented by DCI-Palestine in 2012, with Palestinian youth, ages 14-17, spending as much as 29 days in isolation.

“Israeli interrogators isolate Palestinian kids in a small, filthy cell and shuffle them back and forth to interrogation over a period of several days, where they are pressured and coerced into providing a confession,” said Ayed Abu Eqtaish, Accountability Program director at DCI-Palestine. “Israeli authorities must ban the use of solitary confinement for anyone under 18, no matter what the alleged conduct.”

Since 2008, DCI-Palestine has documented 66 cases of solitary confinement used on Palestinian children. In the overwhelming majority of cases, children are held in solitary confinement while being subjected to repeated and prolonged interrogations, with the apparent purpose of obtaining a confession. During these interrogations, children report being forced to sit in a low metal chair secured to the floor of the room, with their hands and feet cuffed to the chair, often for several hours.

“The interrogator made me sit in a low metal chair in the middle of the room and in front of the desk where he was sitting,” said Mohammad K, 16, who was arrested on March 15, accused of throwing stones, and held in solitary confinement for four days at Israel’s al-Jalame detention facility. “The interrogator tied my hands and feet to the chair, then slapped me hard and ordered me to confess.”

The detrimental psychological and physical effects of detaining persons in solitary confinement are well documented and include panic attacks, fear of impending death, depression, social withdrawal, a sense of hopelessness, unprovoked anger, short attention span, disorientation, paranoia, psychotic episodes, self-mutilation, and attempted suicide.

For these reasons, UN Special Rapporteur on Torture Juan Méndez called for a complete ban on the use of solitary confinement for children in a report submitted to the UN General Assembly in 2011. He concluded that the use of solitary confinement “can amount to torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, during pretrial detention, indefinitely or for a prolonged period, for persons with mental disabilities or juveniles.”

“I was really tired from being alone in solitary confinement, so I decided to confess to planting an improvised explosive device, hoping that would spare me the torture,” said Anwar A, 17, who was arrested on January 21 and held in solitary confinement for 14 days at al-Jalame.

Children held in solitary confinement at al-Jalame report being detained in a tiny cell with a toilet and a concrete bed, or a thin, dirty mattress. Meals, sometimes inedible, are passed to children through a flap in the door, and there are no windows. The only source of light comes from a dim yellow bulb that is reported to be kept on 24 hours a day.

“I could not tell day from night, except when they took me to the interrogation room,” said Moatasem N, 17, who was arrested on January 29 and held in solitary confinement for 21 days at al-Jalame. “Food was brought through a hole in the door, and I never saw who was serving it. Sometimes the food was really bad and cannot be served to humans.”

DCI-Palestine maintains that the military courts must exclude all evidence obtained by force or coercion or when a child is not appropriately informed of his right to silence. Additionally, the practice of using solitary confinement on children in Israeli detention facilities must be stopped immediately, and the prohibition must be enshrined in law. Effective accountability measures must be introduced to ensure all credible reports of torture and ill-treatment are impartially investigated and perpetrators are held accountable.

Anwar A, 17, spent 14 days in solitary confinement at Israel's al-Jalame detention facility in January.Ramallah, 17 April 2013—Israeli authorities held at least seven Palestinian youths, aged 16 to 17, in solitary confinement for periods reaching up to 21 days so far this year, based on DCI-Palestine's research.
The figure represents one-third of the number of solitary confinement cases documented by DCI-Palestine in 2012, with Palestinian youth, ages 14-17, spending as much as 29 days in isolation.
“Israeli interrogators isolate Palestinian kids in a small, filthy cell and shuffle them back and forth to interrogation over a period of several days, where they are pressured and coerced into providing a confession,” said Ayed Abu Eqtaish, Accountability Program director at DCI-Palestine. “Israeli authorities must ban the use of solitary confinement for anyone under 18, no matter what the alleged conduct.”
Since 2008, DCI-Palestine has documented 66 cases of solitary confinement used on Palestinian children. In the overwhelming majority of cases, children are held in solitary confinement while being subjected to repeated and prolonged interrogations, with the apparent purpose of obtaining a confession. During these interrogations, children report being forced to sit in a low metal chair secured to the floor of the room, with their hands and feet cuffed to the chair, often for several hours.
“The interrogator made me sit in a low metal chair in the middle of the room and in front of the desk where he was sitting,” said Mohammad K, 16, who was arrested on March 15, accused of throwing stones, and held in solitary confinement for four days at Israel’s al-Jalame detention facility. “The interrogator tied my hands and feet to the chair, then slapped me hard and ordered me to confess.”
The detrimental psychological and physical effects of detaining persons in solitary confinement are well documented and include panic attacks, fear of impending death, depression, social withdrawal, a sense of hopelessness, unprovoked anger, short attention span, disorientation, paranoia, psychotic episodes, self-mutilation, and attempted suicide.
For these reasons, UN Special Rapporteur on Torture Juan Méndez called for a complete ban on the use of solitary confinement for children in a report submitted to the UN General Assembly in 2011. He concluded that the use of solitary confinement “can amount to torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, during pretrial detention, indefinitely or for a prolonged period, for persons with mental disabilities or juveniles.”
“I was really tired from being alone in solitary confinement, so I decided to confess to planting an improvised explosive device, hoping that would spare me the torture,” said Anwar A, 17, who was arrested on January 21 and held in solitary confinement for 14 days at al-Jalame.
Children held in solitary confinement at al-Jalame report being detained in a tiny cell with a toilet and a concrete bed, or a thin, dirty mattress. Meals, sometimes inedible, are passed to children through a flap in the door, and there are no windows. The only source of light comes from a dim yellow bulb that is reported to be kept on 24 hours a day.
“I could not tell day from night, except when they took me to the interrogation room,” said Moatasem N, 17, who was arrested on January 29 and held in solitary confinement for 21 days at al-Jalame. “Food was brought through a hole in the door, and I never saw who was serving it. Sometimes the food was really bad and cannot be served to humans.”
DCI-Palestine maintains that the military courts must exclude all evidence obtained by force or coercion or when a child is not appropriately informed of his right to silence. Additionally, the practice of using solitary confinement on children in Israeli detention facilities must be stopped immediately, and the prohibition must be enshrined in law. Effective accountability measures must be introduced to ensure all credible reports of torture and ill-treatment are impartially investigated and perpetrators are held accountable.

Ramallah, 17 April 2013—Israeli authorities held at least seven Palestinian youths, aged 16 to 17, in solitary confinement for periods reaching up to 21 days so far this year, based on DCI-Palestine's research.

The figure represents one-third of the number of solitary confinement cases documented by DCI-Palestine in 2012, with Palestinian youth, ages 14-17, spending as much as 29 days in isolation.

“Israeli interrogators isolate Palestinian kids in a small, filthy cell and shuffle them back and forth to interrogation over a period of several days, where they are pressured and coerced into providing a confession,” said Ayed Abu Eqtaish, Accountability Program director at DCI-Palestine. “Israeli authorities must ban the use of solitary confinement for anyone under 18, no matter what the alleged conduct.”

Since 2008, DCI-Palestine has documented 66 cases of solitary confinement used on Palestinian children. In the overwhelming majority of cases, children are held in solitary confinement while being subjected to repeated and prolonged interrogations, with the apparent purpose of obtaining a confession. During these interrogations, children report being forced to sit in a low metal chair secured to the floor of the room, with their hands and feet cuffed to the chair, often for several hours.

“The interrogator made me sit in a low metal chair in the middle of the room and in front of the desk where he was sitting,” said Mohammad K, 16, who was arrested on March 15, accused of throwing stones, and held in solitary confinement for four days at Israel’s al-Jalame detention facility. “The interrogator tied my hands and feet to the chair, then slapped me hard and ordered me to confess.”

The detrimental psychological and physical effects of detaining persons in solitary confinement are well documented and include panic attacks, fear of impending death, depression, social withdrawal, a sense of hopelessness, unprovoked anger, short attention span, disorientation, paranoia, psychotic episodes, self-mutilation, and attempted suicide.

For these reasons, UN Special Rapporteur on Torture Juan Méndez called for a complete ban on the use of solitary confinement for children in a report submitted to the UN General Assembly in 2011. He concluded that the use of solitary confinement “can amount to torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, during pretrial detention, indefinitely or for a prolonged period, for persons with mental disabilities or juveniles.”

“I was really tired from being alone in solitary confinement, so I decided to confess to planting an improvised explosive device, hoping that would spare me the torture,” said Anwar A, 17, who was arrested on January 21 and held in solitary confinement for 14 days at al-Jalame.

Children held in solitary confinement at al-Jalame report being detained in a tiny cell with a toilet and a concrete bed, or a thin, dirty mattress. Meals, sometimes inedible, are passed to children through a flap in the door, and there are no windows. The only source of light comes from a dim yellow bulb that is reported to be kept on 24 hours a day.

“I could not tell day from night, except when they took me to the interrogation room,” said Moatasem N, 17, who was arrested on January 29 and held in solitary confinement for 21 days at al-Jalame. “Food was brought through a hole in the door, and I never saw who was serving it. Sometimes the food was really bad and cannot be served to humans.”

DCI-Palestine maintains that the military courts must exclude all evidence obtained by force or coercion or when a child is not appropriately informed of his right to silence. Additionally, the practice of using solitary confinement on children in Israeli detention facilities must be stopped immediately, and the prohibition must be enshrined in law. Effective accountability measures must be introduced to ensure all credible reports of torture and ill-treatment are impartially investigated and perpetrators are held accountable.

The Prisoners' Diaries Arabic version book

In Gaza it will be available for sale at the Hashim Yeop Sani library at the Centre for Political and Development Studies , Nema'a Tower, Gaza City. Sale proceeds will be used to fund library activities to encourage citizen journalism.

Book reviews

" This book is so valuable as it combines the witnessing by prisoners with just enough information about the magnitude of the Israeli prison system to give readers a true understanding of this most agonizing dimension of the Palestinian ordeal.”(..More)

− Richard Falk,Albert G. Milbank Professor of International Law Emeritus, Princeton University and UN Special Rapporteur for occupied Palestinian Territories

"While activists and supporters of the Palestinian cause will undoubtedly be outraged by the atrocities narrated in this book, it would serve as an incentive for international leaders and organisations clamouring for human rights to reconsider and reconcile themselves with the universality of such themes."-- Ramona Wadi, Middle East Monitor. (..More)

“ I defy you to read these stories and not weep for Jews and Palestinians. Now dry your eyes and work for justice, peace and reconciliation.”